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Videos can use content-based copyright law contains reasonable use Fair Use ([ Ссылка ]). It’s the story of a lonely man, living at home with his frail and overbearing mother, and pushed to violence after a lifetime on the fringes of society. And it’s not Joker, the Warner Bros. release that has sucked up a whole lot of oxygen on its way to theaters this weekend. It’s Cuck, the debut feature from director Rob Lambert, out now in limited theaters and on VOD. Where Joker nods at the real-life story of isolated young men—many of them self-identifying as “incels,” or “involuntary celibates”—Cuck is a very realistic, if fictionalized, approach. “There’s a lot of similarities between our films, and there’s no getting around that,” Lambert said. “They’re playing with this mythologizing of a violent loner, where we wanted to hug reality.” The timing, however, is entirely coincidental—Cuck was picture-locked when Joker started shooting, according to Lambert. Cuck, named for an insult favored by the alt-right, follows the violent descent of a loner named Ronnie, played by 90210 and Everything Sucks! supporting player Zachary Ray Sherman. He lives at home with his televangelist-obsessed mother (Sally Kirkland) and spends most of his time locked away in his dark bedroom, where he slavishly follows the words of Chance Dalmain (Travis Hammer), an alt-right celebrity who closely resembles real-life Vice cofounder and Proud Boys founder Gavin McInnes. Dalmain rants constantly about an America under siege by immigrants, libtards, and Jewish media control; Ronnie believes it’s up to patriots like him to save it. Lambert grew up in Montana near Wayne Lo, who shot and killed two people at a college in Massachusetts in 1992. “They found a bunch of extremist, Nazi-ideology stuff in his room,” Lambert said. “It always stuck with me, because I saw him get bullied pretty heavily…. He was Ronnie before Ronnie.” As Lambert wrote the movie with Joe Varkle in 2017, there was no lack of real-life inspiration—the Orlando Pulse nightclub massacre, the Sutherland Springs, Texas, church shooting, and the Charlottesville protests where neo-Nazi James Fields killed activist Heather Heyer with his car. “Ronnie perfectly fit the character profile of James Fields,” Lambert said. “That was the moment that we realized we were onto something.” Cuck had a small festival run, but made its biggest splash before most people had seen it, when the trailer dropped on YouTube September 5. McInnes unleashed a five-minute tirade against the film on his Get Off My Lawn podcast, while right-wing conspiracy theorist Paul Joseph Watson called it an “attempt to vilify conservatives” to his roughly 1 million Twitter followers. “I had a bunch of hackings right when the trailer came out,” Lambert said. “My email and all my social media stuff. They kept deleting
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